Anna Burger Meets the Bloggers

CtW Chair speaks on why America needs the Employee Free Choice Act

Campaigns

The way working people in America will obtain a decent standard of living is to unite together into unions. Learn about our major campaigns to accomplish that by watching our overview video: Quicktime (dial-up, broadband), Windows Media Player (dial-up, broadband).


Alarmed About CVS Caremark logo

Alarmed About CVS Caremark
Change to Win represents workers in CVS Caremark plans that cover more than 10 million people. On behalf of these health plan members, our initiative seeks legislation reform of the PBM industry to protect plan members’ health and privacy.


Put Pharmacy First

Put Pharmacy First
Put Pharmacy First is a campaign by retail pharmacists to reform their industry. It includes concerned pharmacists from across the nation, including members of Change to Win, who want to work together to promote the highest professional standards and put patients ahead of profits.


Warehouse Workers United

Warehouse Workers United
A new organization of the warehouse workers that play a crucial role in our global economy, dedicated to ensuring that warehouse jobs are good, middle class jobs with living wages, affordable health care benefits, and job security, so working people can share in the prosperity of the big national retailers.


Hotel Workers Rising campaign logo

Hotel Workers Rising
Empowering thousands of hotel workers in cities across North America as they work to improve their jobs and secure better lives for their families.


Port driver at work

Ports Protection
Seeking to unite 60,000 truck drivers at our nation's ports to improve their pay and working conditions and to improve our nation's security.


Wal-Mart campaign logo

Wal-Mart Campaign
With $11 billion in profit, Wal-Mart can do better than poverty level wages, no company health insurance for many employees, and discriminating against female workers.


Uniform Justice campaign logo

Uniform Justice
Cintas, the most profitable uniform and laundry company in North America, pays most of its workers poverty level wages -- between $7 and $9 an hour.

This web page is paid for by the Change to Win Committee for the American Dream and is not authorized by any candidate or candidate committee.